Indian forces kill sixth protester in two days
SRINAGAR:
Two more protesters were killed on Saturday in revolt-hit Indian Kashmir, bringing to six the number of young men shot dead by security forces in two days.
The latest casualties marked the deadliest 48 hours in Indian Kashmir since June 11 when turmoil had first erupted after a 17-year-old student demonstrator was killed by a police tear-gas shell.
So far, Indian security forces have been accused of killing 23 Kashmiri civilians – many of them in their teens or twenties – in less than two months.
The latest casualty, a 30-year-old man, was killed when security forces opened fire at rock-throwing protesters in northern Baramulla town, a police officer said on condition of anonymity.
Earlier in the day, a young man was killed in neighbouring Naidkhai village when “security forces opened fire as a group of protesters tried to attack a police camp,” he said.
The deaths brought to six the number of people killed in clashes with security forces since Friday in Baramulla district, known as a hotbed of separatist sentiment.
“We condemn this brutal use of force against peaceful protesters,” senior Hurriyat leader Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, who is under house arrest in Indian Kashmir’s summer capital Srinagar, said. He appealed for the “international community, the United Nations in particular, to step in to save my people who are being persecuted for demanding freedom from India.”
Farooq, who has held several rounds of talks with India in the past on the region’s future, ruled out further negotiations until New Delhi pulls out troops, frees political prisoners and repeals tough security laws.
He said the ongoing protests were “spontaneous and indigenous” and in reaction to presence of “tens of thousands of Indian troops in Kashmir.”
Several other demonstrators were injured, one of them seriously, in Saturday’s firing incident in Naidkhai village, according to police.
The latest round of police shooting happened in northern Kashmir as authorities struggled to subdue protesters defying a strict curfew that was imposed on all major towns in the Kashmir valley on Saturday.
Each new death has sparked a new cycle of violence despite appeals for calm from state Chief Minister Omar Abdullah and Indian Home Minister P Chidambaram.
In Sopore, protesters set fire to a railway station, smashing windows and breaking furniture, and hurling stones, another police officer said. Security forces fired shots to disperse the protesters, injuring four people, the officer said.
In neighbouring Kreeri town, demonstrators torched a counter-insurgency police camp and threw stones at a security patrol, prompting forces to fire in self-defence, injuring two women and one man, he said. “The condition of one injured woman is critical,” the officer said.
In Pampore, demonstrators set fire to two Indian Air Force vehicles but police fired tear gas and warning shots and were able to rescue the occupants, police said.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 1st, 2010.
Two more protesters were killed on Saturday in revolt-hit Indian Kashmir, bringing to six the number of young men shot dead by security forces in two days.
The latest casualties marked the deadliest 48 hours in Indian Kashmir since June 11 when turmoil had first erupted after a 17-year-old student demonstrator was killed by a police tear-gas shell.
So far, Indian security forces have been accused of killing 23 Kashmiri civilians – many of them in their teens or twenties – in less than two months.
The latest casualty, a 30-year-old man, was killed when security forces opened fire at rock-throwing protesters in northern Baramulla town, a police officer said on condition of anonymity.
Earlier in the day, a young man was killed in neighbouring Naidkhai village when “security forces opened fire as a group of protesters tried to attack a police camp,” he said.
The deaths brought to six the number of people killed in clashes with security forces since Friday in Baramulla district, known as a hotbed of separatist sentiment.
“We condemn this brutal use of force against peaceful protesters,” senior Hurriyat leader Mirwaiz Umar Farooq, who is under house arrest in Indian Kashmir’s summer capital Srinagar, said. He appealed for the “international community, the United Nations in particular, to step in to save my people who are being persecuted for demanding freedom from India.”
Farooq, who has held several rounds of talks with India in the past on the region’s future, ruled out further negotiations until New Delhi pulls out troops, frees political prisoners and repeals tough security laws.
He said the ongoing protests were “spontaneous and indigenous” and in reaction to presence of “tens of thousands of Indian troops in Kashmir.”
Several other demonstrators were injured, one of them seriously, in Saturday’s firing incident in Naidkhai village, according to police.
The latest round of police shooting happened in northern Kashmir as authorities struggled to subdue protesters defying a strict curfew that was imposed on all major towns in the Kashmir valley on Saturday.
Each new death has sparked a new cycle of violence despite appeals for calm from state Chief Minister Omar Abdullah and Indian Home Minister P Chidambaram.
In Sopore, protesters set fire to a railway station, smashing windows and breaking furniture, and hurling stones, another police officer said. Security forces fired shots to disperse the protesters, injuring four people, the officer said.
In neighbouring Kreeri town, demonstrators torched a counter-insurgency police camp and threw stones at a security patrol, prompting forces to fire in self-defence, injuring two women and one man, he said. “The condition of one injured woman is critical,” the officer said.
In Pampore, demonstrators set fire to two Indian Air Force vehicles but police fired tear gas and warning shots and were able to rescue the occupants, police said.
Published in The Express Tribune, August 1st, 2010.